Ответы на аудирование по английскому языку 11 класс 16
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Dating > Ответы на аудирование по английскому языку 11 класс 16
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Interviewer: Why do you go by your middle name? », «Have a nice day! Read the text and choose the correct item to complete the sentences.
What advice does the speaker give? You now have 15 seconds to check your answers. Teacher Ann: Not as such, but things have happened in the world of education that I think are to be regretted. It contained a description of physical conditions on the moon and discussed ways in which man could possibly live on the moon. She stopped to feed them bananas. My sister and I cleaned the dining room, which had hardwood floors like every room in the house. Visitors said they had never noticed before how strong the air was. А1-А7 Вы услышите радиопередачу о звездах современной рок-музыки. At weekends we have some free time to play games, go for walks or into town. The heating doesn't always work and the breakfast in very early in the morning. We went through September in our usual way, with defeats and wins alternating.
And he almost always uses his mobile phone or laptop connecting to wireless networks when he is out of home. I would go to see a play more often if they had more theatres around where I live.
Выпускной экзамен по английскому языку - The first of the examination papers consists of a piece of Greek translation which the candidates for the scholarship have not seen before. Ruth Lawrence was a gifted child.
Напоминаем, что в соответствии с профстандартом педагога утверждён Приказом Минтруда России , если у Вас нет соответствующего преподаваемому предмету образования, то Вам необходимо пройти профессиональную переподготовку по профилю педагогической деятельности. Только сейчас действует СКИДКА 50% для всех педагогов на все 111 курсов профессиональной переподготовки! Доступна рассрочка с первым взносом всего 10%, при этом цена курса не увеличивается из-за использования рассрочки! КОНТРОЛЬ АУДИРОВАНИЯ И ЧТЕНИЯ В 10 — 11 КЛАССАХ ОБЩЕОБРАЗОВАТЕЛЬНЫХ ШКОЛ Аникеенко Н. An instructor at Springfield College in Massachusetts climbed up a ladder and nailed a fruit basket to the wall of the gymnasium. Then he climbed down the ladder. He picked up a football and threw it. The ball went into the basket. As he climbed back up the ladder to get the ball, the man was very glad. Maybe he had solved his problem! Well, he would soon see. Ten minutes later, eighteen young men ran into the little gym. The instructor put nine boys on one side and one on the other. He told them to throw the ball to each other or bounce it and, when they were near the wall where the basket was nailed, to try and throw the ball into the basket. The game started, and what a game it was! When several of the young men fell to the floor as they were playing, the instructor stopped the game. You have to throw it or bounce it to someone else on your side. The man pushed will have a free throw at the basket. Nobody must try to catch the ball on its way to the basket. Quickly, other rules were made. When the game started again, there was less pushing, fewer men falling, and better passing of the ball from one man to another. A second basket was nailed to the wall at the other end of the gym. The man, who nailed the fruit basket to the wall, was a young Canadian. His name was James Naismith, and he was a college teacher. Listen to the text. Are the following statements about the text true or false? Change the false statements to make them true. It was a rainy day in November, 1891. Then he threw the ball, and it went into the basket. Ten minutes later, eighteen young men ran into the little gym. The instructor put nine boys on one side and one on the other. If a man pushes another player to get the ball, the game will stop. The man pushed will have a free throw at the basket. The second rule was good. True Reading Cheeses I remember a friend of mine buying a couple of cheeses in Liverpool. Splendid cheeses they were, with a two hundred horsepower scent about them. I was in Liverpool at the time, and my friend asked me to take them back with me to London as he was not coming up for a day or two. I took my ticket, and marched proudly up the platform, with my cheeses, the people falling back respectfully on other side. The train was crowded, and I had to get into a carriage where there were already seven other people. A few minutes passed, and then an old gentleman began to fidget. And then they both rose up without another word and went out. From the next station I had the compartment to myself, though the train was crowded. When his wife came into the room she smelt round for a moment. Tell me the worst. Tom bought them in Liverpool, and asked me to bring them up with me. Had he smelt them? When my friend returned he had to pay fifteen pounds for the hotel. He said he dearly loved a bit of cheese, but it was too expensive for him, so he decided to get rid of them. He took them down to a seaside town, and buried them on the beach. It gained the place quite a reputation. Visitors said they had never noticed before how strong the air was. Read the text and choose the correct item to complete the sentences. Keys: 1-c, 2-d, 3-a, 4-d, 5-b, 6-a, 7-c, 8-b, 9-d, 10-d. II ce местр Listening An Incident It was the early evening rush-hour in Montgomery. Rosa Parks had just finished work for the day and was waiting at a bus-stop for a bus to take her home. When the bus arrived, she got on through the front door and dropped her twenty cents fare into the coin box next to the driver. Then she quickly stepped off the bus again and hurried to the back to board by the rear door. Standing at the back of the moving bus, she noticed that although there were a number of seats free in the first four rows, there was only one empty seat in her part of the bus. She walked forward to the fifth row and sat down, glad to have found a place to sit. At the next stop, some more passengers got on and filled the empty seats in the first four rows. One man could not find a seat, however, and stood in the aisle next to Mrs. Parks waiting for her to get up for him. Parks did not move. The bus driver swore and stopped the bus in the middle of the road. He had been watching Mrs. Parks and the man in his rear mirror and was very angry. He got out of his seat, walked down the aisle and ordered her to stand. Parks quietly but firmly refused. She had been standing all day in the department store where she worked and was tired. The bus driver swore at her, and, when she still refused to move, called the police. Parks was still sitting in her seat when two policemen arrived a few minutes later. When she again refused to get up, the policemen arrested her for breaking the city bus regulations. Listen to the text and choose the correct item to complete the sentences. Parks to stand up. Keys: 1-b, 2-a, 3-b, 4-d, 5-c, 6-d, 7-c, 8-a, 9-b, 10d, 11c. Reading Real Life Drama: Face to Face with Hurricane Camille John Koshak knew that Hurricane Camille would be bad. He had heard warnings on the radio and TV all day as the storm rushed northwest across the Gulf of Mexico. This house has stood here since 1915, and no hurricane has blown it away. They filled the bathtub and every bucket they could find with water. This was in case the water mains were damaged. They checked the batteries in their flashlights and put kerosene in two lanterns in case there was a power failure. They closed the shutters on the windows. They had never seen such wind and rain before; the house was shaking. The sea water was up to the door. Suddenly the door blew off; sea water filled the downstairs, and the electricity went off. The Koshak family — John, his parents, wife, children, and a cat and a dog — sat on the stairs and watched the water rise higher and higher. A moment later, the wind lifted the roof off the house, and the bedroom walls collapsed. Everybody lie on the floor! His father tore the doors from the closets. The water was already running across the floor. The dog and the cat had disappeared. The Koshaks huddled on the floor and prayed. After what seemed an eternity, the wind dropped, and the water stopped rising. The hurricane had passed, the family had survived. Are the following statements about the text true or false? Change the false statements to make them true. His house was built in1915. The house was damaged. The cat and the dog had disappeared. True 11 класс I ce местр Listening The Adventure of Three Students In 1895 Mr. Sherlock Holmes and I spent some weeks in one of our great University towns. It was during this time that the facts which I am going to tell you took place. One evening we received a visit from a certain Mr. Hilton Soames, lecturer at the College of St. Soames was so excited that it was clear that something very unusual had happened. It is one of these cases when it is quite necessary to avoid scandal. I am sure you will keep our secret. You are the only man in the world who can help me. I beg you, Mr. Holmes, to do what you can. I am one of the examiners. My subject is Greek. The first of the examination papers consists of a piece of Greek translation which the candidates for the scholarship have not seen before. Of course, every candidate would be happy if he could see it before the examination and prepare it in advance. So much care is taken to keep it secret. I was absent a little more than an hour. For a moment I thought I had left my own key there, But when I put my hand in my pocket, I found my key in it. The other key to my room belonged to my servant, Bannister, who has been looking after my room for ten years. I am absolutely sure of his honesty. I understood that he had entered my room to ask if I wanted tear. Are the following statements about the text true or false? Change the false statements to make them true. Sherlock Holmes and I spent some weeks in one of our great University towns. Hilton Soames, the director of the College of St. Holmes agreed to help him at once. Soames was one of the examiners. Soames came back to his room after tea, he saw a key there. Hilton Soames was a lecturer at the College of St. His subject was Greek. It consisted of a piece of Greek translation. His own key was in his pocket. Reading When Did Man First Dream of Space Travel? The dream of leaving the earth and reaching another world can be traced back in history to the second century A. At the time a Greek, Lucian of Samos, wrote a fantasy about a man who was carried to the moon by a waterspout during a storm. The moon was the obvious destination for such fantasies because it is so large and has clearly visible markings, which could be thought of as a land and sea areas. But for the next 1400 years, the dream of reaching the moon was abandoned. It was not until 300 years ago, when the famous Italian astronomer Galileo looked through his telescope and told about the other worlds he saw, that men realized there were other worlds in addition to our earth. Again, they began to dream of reaching these worlds. In 1634, there appeared a story about a journey to the moon by Johannes Kepler, the German astronomer who discovered how the planets moved about the sun. Kepler included a detailed description of the surface of the moon, which he had seen through his telescope. The first serious discussion of space travel was written in 1640 by Bishop Wilkins of England. It contained a description of physical conditions on the moon and discussed ways in which man could possibly live on the moon. The first man who wrote about a rocket as a spaceship was the noted Frenchman, Cyrano de Bergerac. In his Voyage to the Moon and History of the Republic of the Sun, he had his space travelers flying to the moon and the sun inside a rocket. When these books were written, no one seriously thought that it would be possible to fly through space. It was not until Jules Verne, the French novelist, wrote his story From the Earth to the Moon in 1865 that any attempt was made to apply scientific principles to the space vehicle. By the time that H. Wells, the English author, wrote The First Men on the Moon in 1901, man was already at the beginning of a new era in the development of air travel and conquest of space. Read the text and choose the correct item to complete the sentences. Keys: 1-b, 2-a, 3-b, 4-c, 5-d, 6-a, 7-c, 8-b, 9-d, 10-a, 11-b II ce местр Listening A Friend in Need One afternoon I was sitting in the lounge of the Grand Hotel in Yokohama. Burton came into the lounge presently and caught sight of me. He seated himself in the chair next to mine. He was a merchant. A conversation began and he told me his story. Lenny Burton he called himself. I used to play with him a lot. He was in Kobe for some time. He was always well-dressed and good looking. Of course, he drank too much. Fellows like him always do. Once in a quarter he got some money from home and he made a bit more by card-playing. He won a lot of mine, I know that. I was rather surprised. He told me that there was no more money coming from home and he wanted to work. I asked him how old he was. He went rather pale. Then he told me that he had bad luck at cards for some time. I looked at him for a bit. I could see now That he was all to pieces. He had been drinking more than usual and he looked fifty. Suddenly I had an idea. When I was a young man I swam round the beacon in Kobe. He looked at me for a moment and then he agreed. It was just after ten. I wished him good luck and he left me. I had a lot of work to do that morning and could only get to the place at half past twelve. But he never turned up. The currents round the beacon were more then he could do. I was a little shocked. Then I asked Burton a question. Keys: 1-c, 2-a, 3-d, 4-b, 5-d, 6-a, 7-c, 8-b, 9-b, 10-b, 11-d Reading Ruthless Judson Webb was an American businessman. He had a comfortable flat in New York but in summer he used to leave the dusty city and go to the country. There he had a cottage which consisted of three rooms, a bathroom and a kitchen. In one of the rooms there was a big closet where he kept his guns, fishing rods, wine and other things. It was autumn now and Judson was packing his things for the winter. In a few minutes he would be driving back to New York. As he looked at the shelf on which the whiskey stood his face became serious. All the bottles were unopened except one which was less than half full. It was placed in front with a whiskey-glass by its side. Then he opened the bottle. His wife looked at him in horror. He closed the bottle and put it back on the shelf near the little whiskey-glass. If a man robs me of five dollars it is the same as if he took a hundred. He had always been ruthless in business. She went to the door. Someone had to know. Helen went down the road and Judson started to close the closet door. He suddenly remembered that he had not packed his boots drying outside on the heavy table in the garden. So, leaving the door open, he went to get them. But when he wanted to reach for his boots he suddenly slipped on a stone and his head struck the table as he fell. Webb, it was not a bad fall. Are the following statements about the text true or false? Change the false statements to make them true. He was an American businessman. He spent summer in the country. It was autumn and Judson was packing his things for the winter. He put two small tablets into the bottle. Авторские права на материалы принадлежат их законным авторам. Частичное или полное копирование материалов сайта без письменного разрешения администрации сайта запрещено! Мнение редакции может не совпадать с точкой зрения авторов. Ответственность за разрешение любых спорных моментов, касающихся самих материалов и их содержания, берут на себя пользователи, разместившие материал на сайте. Однако редакция сайта готова оказать всяческую поддержку в решении любых вопросов связанных с работой и содержанием сайта. 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